41.
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Heidegger Circle Proceedings:
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32
Theodore Kiesel
Situating Rhetoric/Politics in Heidegger°s Practical Ontology:
(1923-1925: The French Occupation of the Ruhr)
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42.
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Heidegger Circle Proceedings:
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32
Will McNeill
The Time of the Augenblick
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43.
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Heidegger Circle Proceedings:
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32
Charles Scott
The Memory of Time in the Light of Flesh
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44.
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Heidegger Circle Proceedings:
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32
Lawrence J. Hatab
The Ekstatic Nature of Empathy:
A Heideggerian Opening for Ethics
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45.
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Heidegger Circle Proceedings:
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32
François Raffoul
Ethics and Ontology:
On Levinas°s Reading of Heidegger
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46.
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Heidegger Circle Proceedings:
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32
Daniela Neu
Overcoming the Ontological Difference in Heidegger's "Contributions to Philosophy"
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47.
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Heidegger Circle Proceedings:
Volume >
32
Richard Polt
What is Inceptive Thinking?
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48.
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Heidegger Circle Proceedings:
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44
Andrew Feenberg
Function and Meaning:
The Double Aspects of Technology
abstract |
view |
rights & permissions
This paper traces the theoretical background to the split between function and meaning in the modernity theories of Marx, Lukács, Weber and Marcuse. It then discusses attempts to overcome the split in the recent philosophies of technology of Simpson and Borgmann. These attempts fail but help to focus the issue. A discussion of contemporary struggles over information technology offers a more hopeful perspective on a possible resolution of the split and suggests a new look at Heidegger’s phenomenology of action. The conclusion of the paper shows that Heidegger offers resources for addressing the relation of function and meaning which he himself did not develop.
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49.
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Heidegger Circle Proceedings:
Volume >
44
Soren Riis
The Ultimate Technology:
The End of Technology and the Task of Biology
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50.
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Heidegger Circle Proceedings:
Volume >
44
Don Ihde
Heidegger’s Technologies: Pen versus Typewriter
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51.
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Heidegger Circle Proceedings:
Volume >
44
Babette Babich
Heidegger’s Philosophy of Science:
Towards a Phenomenology of Questioning as Critique of Calculation
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52.
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Heidegger Circle Proceedings:
Volume >
44
Joydeep Bagchee
Commentary on Vishwa Adluri’s “Heidegger’s Encounter with Aristotle: A Theological Deconstruction of Metaphysics”
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53.
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Heidegger Circle Proceedings:
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44
Vishwa Adluri
Heidegger’s Encounter with Aristotle:
A Theological Deconstruction of Metaphysics
abstract |
view |
rights & permissions
This paper examines Heidegger’s concept of facticity in his writings from the 1920s. The sudden ‘discovery’ of facticity in these writings and Heidegger’s subsequent engagement with Aristotle are related to a decision to rethink existence in terms of Luther’s and Paul’s interpretation of early Christianity. Central to this interpretation is the experience of the καιρός and the awaiting of the παρουσία. Heidegger argues that this primordial Christian experience (urchristliche Erfahrung) constitutes a fundamental experience (Grunderfahrung) of factical life and undertakes a destruction of Scholastic theology and the ancient and especially, Aristotelian, ontology upon which it is based.3 Heidegger’s philosophical project thus centers in the recovery of this fundamental experience of facticity through a destructive appropriation of the tradition. In this paper, I argue that one of Heidegger’s key strategies in turning to Aristotle is to exclude cyclical temporality - whether thought of as transmigration of the soul (Plato) or as eternal recurrence (Nietzsche) – which is incompatible with this Christian experience.
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54.
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Heidegger Circle Proceedings:
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44
Lawrence J. Hatab
Commentary on Steven Crowell’s “Agency, Morality, and the Essential Consciencelessness of Action”
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55.
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Heidegger Circle Proceedings:
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44
Christopher Yates
The Necessity of Distress and the Abandonment of Being in Heidegger’s Beiträge zur Philosophie
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56.
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Heidegger Circle Proceedings:
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44
Steven Crowell
Agency, Morality, and the Essential Consciencelessness of Action
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57.
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Heidegger Circle Proceedings:
Volume >
44
Maureen Melnyk
Commentary on Christopher Yates’ “The Necessity of Distress and the Abandonment of Being in Heidegger’s Beiträge zur Philosophie (vom Ereignis)”
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58.
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Heidegger Circle Proceedings:
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44
Christopher Ruth
Marx and Heidegger: The Question of the Human
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59.
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Heidegger Circle Proceedings:
Volume >
44
Robert Bernasconi
Poets as Prophets and as Painters:
Heidegger’s Turn to Language and the Hölderlinian Turn in Context
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60.
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Heidegger Circle Proceedings:
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44
Scott Campbell
Dilthey, Destruction, and the Early Heidegger’s Philosophy of Life
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